Post on 21-Oct-2020
Britain in the Commonwealth: the 1997 Edinburgh summitWitness SeminarEdited by
Dr Sue Onslow, Deputy Director, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study
and
Dr Michael Kandiah, Director, Witness Seminar Programme, Department of Political Economy, King’s College London.
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Britain in the Commonwealth: The 1997 Edinburgh Commonwealth heads of Government meeting
Monday, 19th March 2018 The Court Room
First Floor Senate House Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
Programme:
Chair: Dr Sue Onslow, Deputy Director, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Witnesses:
Participants:
Amitav Banerji, then Deputy Conference Secretary, Commonwealth Secretariat
Sir Richard Dales, KCVO, CMG, then Director, Africa and the Commonwealth, FCO, [Written contribution]
Martin Hatfull, then Head, Commonwealth Coordination Department, Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO)
Sir John Holmes GCVO, KBE, CMG, then Principal Private Secretary (PPS) to the Prime Minister
Anji Hunter, then Personal Assistant to the Prime Minister, the Rt Hon Tony Blair
Stuart Mole CVO OBE, then Director and Head of the Office of the Commonwealth Secretary General, Chief Emeka Anyaoku
Prunella Scarlett LVO, then Director, Commonwealth Affairs at the Royal Commonwealth Society (RCS)
Introduction
The meeting in Edinburgh in 1997 was the last occasion on which Britain hosted the Commonwealth heads’ meeting, and the discussions covered a range of important issues for the future direction of the association which remain relevant and highly topical: the great step forward on trade, business and investment; the denouement of the Nigerian crisis and the willingness to impose sanctions; the return of Fiji and the presence of President Nelson Mandela; the elevation of HM the Queen into the summit itself; the start of a visible Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) presence; and discussion on possible new members.
This is the third in a series of witness seminars organized by the Institute of
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Commonwealth Studies. The first focused on the formation and work of the Eminent Persons Group of 1986 and the outcome and impact of the EPG’s visit to apartheid South Africa. The second addressed the role and functions of the Commonwealth Secretariat since 1965 and was held on June 2013.
This seminar is being organized in collaboration with King’s College, London. Since 1986, the ICBH Witness Seminar Programme has conducted nearly 100 witness seminars on a variety of subjects: most recently, the ICBH’s witness seminar series has examined the work of UK Embassies/High Commissions in Washington, Moscow, New Delhi, Pretoria and the Caribbean. These witness seminars have been well received by both practitioners, and the academic community who have increasingly come to see that it is important to examine and analyse the function of British overseas missions, as well as to capture the perspective of contemporary actors of recent events.
The significance of history and the importance of gathering and utilizing oral history interviews have also been identified in the report of the Foreign Affairs Committee, The Role of the FCO in UK Government (published 29 April 2011). In oral evidence, Foreign Secretary William Hague stated: ‘history is vitally important in knowledge and practice of foreign policy’. He further stated, ‘One of the things that I have asked to be worked up is a better approach to how we use the alumni of the Foreign Office, [and]… continue to connect them more systematically to the Foreign Office.’ He went on to say: ‘these people who are really at the peak of their knowledge of the world, with immense diplomatic experience, then walk out of the door, never to be seen again in the Foreign Office.’
In terms of the Commonwealth, the Institute of Commonwealth Studies’ extensive collection of interviews with leading Commonwealth figures in the modern Commonwealth, contains a number of important interviews of those who were involved in the 1997 Edinburgh summit. However, the role and insights of leading British figures and diplomats is absent and needs to be collected, particularly as British officials prepare again to host a Commonwealth summit, and the UK government moves into the Chair-in-Office role until the 2020 Malaysian summit.
For these reasons it is important to gather the memories of those FCO alumni who worked on the preparatory arrangements for the 1997 Edinburgh meeting, together with the recollections of senior Commonwealth diplomats, over a period in which the UK’s relationship within the Commonwealth continued to evolve.
Dr Sue Onslow, Deputy Director, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London And Dr Michael Kandiah, Director, Witness Seminar Programme, Department of Political Economy, King’s College, London
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Format
The seminar has been divided into two parts. The first witness seminar panel will focus on the preparations around the 1997 Edinburgh summit, the summit itself and ‘retreat’ of Commonwealth leaders at Gleneagles; and the second session will consider the outcome, and implications for British policy and engagement with the modern Commonwealth; and the role and functions of Commonwealth diplomats and civil society organizations.
• The witness seminar is like a group interview or conversation, led andmoderated by the chair.
• There is an audience consisting of Commonwealth Secretariat alumni andcurrent staff, academics and students of foreign policy. If there is time, thechair will ask for contributions and questions from the floor.
• The witness seminar is a public event and it will be recorded and transcribed.
• No one other than the official sound recorder should attempt to record theevent.
• All participants will be identified in the recording and transcripts. It is essentialthat each speaker, whether a witness or from the floor, identify himself orherself before speaking for the first time.
• The agreed transcript of the proceedings, with speakers and theircontributions identified, will be published electronically, on the Institute ofCommonwealth Studies’ Resources platform and on the Round Table (TheCommonwealth Journal of International Affairs) website.
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Brief Chronology1
NOTE: the following is not meant to provide an exhaustive chronology of Britain’s relations within the modern Commonwealth. It is intended to help refresh people’s memories by covering significant events and milestones in the history of the Commonwealth, with reference, where relevant to the UK, and to significant world events:
1926 Imperial Conference: The UK and its Dominions agree they are ‘equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations’.
16 August 1930 The first British Empire Games (the forerunners of the Commonwealth Games), Hamilton, Canada.
11 December 1931 The Statute of Westminster formalizes the Balfour Declaration (1926). Parliament renounces legislative power over the Dominions. It is adopted by Canada, the Irish Free State, Newfoundland and the Union of South Africa. Australia and New Zealand decline.
16 February 1934 Self-government of the Dominion of Newfoundland is suspended, and replaced by the Commission of Government. Newfoundland ceases to be in the Commonwealth.
4 August 1934 The second British Empire Games open in London. 5 February 1938 The third British Empire Games open in Sydney, Australia. 1 May 1944 The first Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference
convenes in London. 23 April 1946 The second Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference
convenes in London. 14 August 1947 Pakistan (including modern Bangladesh) joins the
Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK 15 August 1947 India joins the Commonwealth on being granted independence
by the UK 21 October 1947 India and Pakistan begin the first Indo-Pakistani War, over
Kashmir and Jammu. (The first armed conflict between two members of the Commonwealth).
25 November 1947 New Zealand passes the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act (1947) and becomes a member of the Commonwealth.
4 February 1948 Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) joins the Commonwealth on being granted independence by the UK.
16 June 1948 Three European plantation managers are killed in Perak, sparking the Malayan Emergency, leading to the deployment of Commonwealth troops in Malaya.
11 October 1948 The third Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
31 December 1948 India and Pakistan sign a ceasefire, ending the first Indo-Pakistan War
31 March 1949 Newfoundland (a Dominion since 1934) joins Canada as a province.
18 April 1949 Eire leaves the Commonwealth upon becoming a republic (when the Republic of Ireland Act 1948 comes into effect.)
1 Compiled by Dr Sue Onslow using a variety of open access online sources, which have been acknowledged where appropriate
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22 April 1949 The fourth Commonwealth Prime Minister’s Conference. Agenda is dominated by India’s future within the Commonwealth.
28 April 1949 The Commonwealth Heads of Government issue the London Declaration. It allows India (and henceforth all other members) to remain in the Commonwealth without having the British monarch as Head of State, creates the position of Head of the Commonwealth, and changes the name of the organisation to ‘the Commonwealth of Nations’.
26 January 1950 India becomes a republic, being the first non-Commonwealth Realm member of the Commonwealth.
4 February 1950 The fourth British Empire Games open in Auckland, New Zealand.
4 January 1951 The fifth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
28 July 1950 The First Commonwealth Division is created, amalgamating Australian, British, Canadian, Indian and New Zealand forces engaged in the Korean War.
6 February 1952 George VI dies, and is succeeded as monarch of the Commonwealth Realms and Head of the Commonwealth by Elizabeth II.
28 April 1952 The British Commonwealth Occupation Force is officially disbanded, having transferred control of Far Eastern forces to British Commonwealth Forces, Korea.
20 October 1952 Sir Evelyn Baring, Governor of Kenya, declares a state of emergency. (the Mau Mau uprising)
3 June 1953 The sixth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
The creation of the Central African Federation (amalgamating the colonies of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and the self-governing colony of Southern Rhodesia.)
30 July 1954 The British Empire Games are renamed ‘the British Empire and Commonwealth Games’, with the opening of the 1954 Games in Vancouver, Canada.
26 July 1955 The seventh Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
27 June 1956 The eight Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
6 March 1957 Ghana (the Gold Coast) joins the Commonwealth on being granted independence by the UK, becoming the first majority-ruled African member.
26 June 1957 The ninth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
31 August 1957 The Federation of Malaya joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK. It is the first monarch in the Commonwealth, except for the Commonwealth Realms.
3 January 1958 The Federation of the West Indies is formed from the British West Indies as a self-governing colony.
30 July 1958 the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games open in Cardiff.
3 February 1960 Harold Macmillan gives his Wind of Change speech to the Parliament of South Africa.
3 May 1960 The tenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
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1 October 1960 Nigeria joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
8 March 1961 The eleventh Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London. (The agenda is dominated by criticism of South Africa.)
13 March 1961 Cyprus joins the Commonwealth, having gained independence from the UK the previous year. (Heavily opposed by the UK, it is the first small country to join.)**
27 April 1961 Sierra Leone joins the Commonwealth, upon being granted independence by the UK.
31 May 1961 South Africa becomes a republic, withdrawing from the Commonwealth.
9 December 1961 Tanganyika, now part of Tanzania, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
31 May 1961 The Federation of the West Indies collapses. Its constituent states revert to being colonies of the UK, and preparations begin to grant them separate independence within the Commonwealth.
6 August 1962 Jamaica joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
31 August 1962 Trinidad and Tobago joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
10 September 1962 The twelfth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
9 October 1962 Uganda joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
22 November 1962 The 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games open in Perth, Australia.
10 December 1962 Zanzibar, now part of Tanzania, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK. It is (briefly) the first hereditary monarch in the Commonwealth, except for the Commonwealth Realms.
12 December 1963 Kenya joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
31 December 1963 The Central African Federation formally dissolves. 26 April 1964 Two Commonwealth members, Tanganyika and Zanzibar,
merge to form the United Republic of Tanzania, which joins the Commonwealth.
6 July 1964 Malawi, previously Nyasaland and part of CAF, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
8 July 1964 The thirteenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
21 September 1964 Malta joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
24 October 1964 Zambia, previously Northern Rhodesia, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
18 February 1965 The Gambia joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
17 June 1965 The fourteenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London. The Conference approves the creation of the Commonwealth Secretariat
1 July 1965 The Commonwealth Secretariat is founded. Arnold Smith is appointed first Secretary General.
15 August 1965 India and Pakistan begin the second Indo-Pakistani War, over Kashmir and Jammu.
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6 August 1965 Singapore joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
23 September 1965 India and Pakistan sign a ceasefire. 11 November 1965 Rhodesia issues a Unilateral Declaration of Independence,
which is rejected by London. This sparks a 15 year crisis in the Commonwealth
12 November 1965 The UK imposes full economic sanctions on Rhodesia. 10 January 1966 The fifteenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference
convenes in Lagos, Nigeria, to discuss the Rhodesia crisis. It is the first Conference held outside London.
10 March 1966 The Commonwealth Secretariat Act 1966 is passed, coming into effect retroactively (1 July 1965), granting the Secretariat legal immunity in the UK.
26 May 1966 Guyana, previously British Guiana, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
4 August 1966 The 1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games open in Kingston, Jamaica. It is the first time the Games are held outside the so-called ‘white Commonwealth and the last time the Games include the British Empire in their name.
6 September 1966 The sixteenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London. The UK announces NIBMAR policy towards Rhodesia (No Independence Before Majority African Rule).
30 September 1966 Botswana joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
4 October 1966 Lesotho, formerly Basutoland, joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
30 November 1966 Barbados joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
31 January 1968 Nauru joins the Commonwealth as a ‘Special Member’ upon being granted independence from a joint Australia-New-Zealand-UK trusteeship. It is the first microstate to join.
12 March 1968 Mauritius joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
6 September 1968 Swaziland joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
7 January 1969 The seventeenth and last Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference convenes in London.
2 March 1970 Rhodesia declares itself a republic and a new constitution takes effect.
4 June 1970 Tonga joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
1 July 1970 Arnold Smith begins his second term as Commonwealth Secretary-General.
16 July 1970 The 1970 British Commonwealth Games open in Edinburgh. 28 August 1970 Samoa joins the Commonwealth, having gained independence
from New Zealand in 1962. (Trusteeship) 10 October 1970 Fiji joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 14 January 1971 The first Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
(CHOGM) convenes in Singapore. 22 January 1971 At the conclusion of the first CHOGM, the assembled
Commonwealth Heads of Government issue the Singapore Declaration, setting out the core political values of the Commonwealth. It includes commitments to individual liberty,
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freedom from racism; peace, economic and social development, and international cooperation. (Along with the 1991 Harare Declaration, this one of the two most important documents in the Commonwealth’s constitution.)
26 March 1971 East Pakistan declares its independence as Bangladesh. 3 December 1971 India intervenes in Bangladesh, sparking the Indo-Pakistan
War of 1971. 16 December 1971 Pakistan surrenders to India, ending the war 1972 Pakistan leaves the Commonwealth, on international
recognition of Bangladesh 18 April 1972 Bangladesh joins the Commonwealth, having gained
independence from Pakistan in Dec. 1971. 10 July 1973 The Bahamas joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 2 August 1973 The second Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in Ottawa. 24 January 1974 The 1974 British Commonwealth Games opens in
Christchurch. (The last time the Games’ name includes reference to Britain.)
7 February 1974 Grenada joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
29 April 1975 The third Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in Kingston.
1 July 1975 Guyana’s Shridath Ramphal succeeds Arnold Smith as Commonwealth Secretary General.
16 September 1975 Papua New Guinea joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
29 June 1976 The Seychelles joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
8 June 1977 The fourth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in London. The Gleneagles Declaration, discouraging sporting contacts with apartheid South Africa.
7 July 1978 The Solomon Islands joins the Commonwealth upon being granted independence by the UK.
3 August 1978 The 1978 Commonwealth Games open in Edmonton. 1 October 1978 Tuvalu joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 3 November 1978 Dominica joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 12 July 1979 Kiribati joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 1 August 1979 The fifth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in Lusaka. 7 August 1979 The assembled Commonwealth Heads of Government issue
the Lusaka Declaration, reaffirming the Commonwealth’s opposition to racism and discrimination on the grounds of gender, demanding legal equality of all people of the Commonwealth.
September 1979 The Lancaster House conference convenes in London. 27 October 1979 St Vincent and the Grenadines join the Commonwealth upon
being granted independence by the UK. 12 December 1979 Zimbabwe Rhodesia dissolves itself, returning power to the UK
in preparation for recognised independence following multi-party elections.
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17 April 1980 Zimbabwe formal independence. 1 July 1980 Shridath Ramphal begins his second term as Commonwealth
Secretary General. 1 October 1980 Zimbabwe joins the Commonwealth. 30 July 1981 Vanuatu joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence from a French-UK condominium. 21 September 1981 Belize joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 30 September 1981 The sixth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in Melbourne. 1 November 1981 Antigua and Barbuda joins the Commonwealth upon being
granted independence by the UK. 30 September 1982 The 1982 Commonwealth Games open in Brisbane. 9 July 1983 The Maldives join the Commonwealth as a ‘Special Member’,
upon being granted independence by the UK in 1965. 19 September 1983 St Kitts and Nevis joins the Commonwealth upon being
granted independence by the UK. 25 October 1983 US invasion of Grenada, following Cuban trained troops’ assassination of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop 23 November 1983 The seventh Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in New Delhi. 1 January 1984 Brunei joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by the UK. 31 October 1984 PM Indira Gandhi assassinated. 1 July 1985 Shridath Ramphal begins his third term as Commonwealth
Secretary General. 20 July 1985 The Maldives becomes a full member of the Commonwealth 16 October 1985 The eighth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting
convenes in Nassau. Eminent Persons Group (February – May 1986)
Malcolm Fraser (Australia) Olusegun Obasanjo (Nigeria) Dame Nita Barrow (Barbedos) Archbishop Edward Stott (Canada) Anthony Barber (Great Britain) John Malecela (Tanzania) Swaran Singh (India)
24 July 1986 The 1986 Commonwealth Games open in Edinburgh. The Games are boycotted by 32 countries, including almost all African, Caribbean and Asian nations, in protest against the British government’s attitude to sport in apartheid South Africa.
3 August 1986** The ninth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in London. Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group Report formally presented.
13 October 1987 The tenth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in Vancouver (the first outside the host nation’s capital city.)
15 October 1987 Fiji is suspended from the Commonwealth, after two coups d’etat
29 September 1989 Cameroon applies for observer status in the Commonwealth, paving the way for its membership in 1995.
1 October 1989 Pakistan rejoins the Commonwealth 18 October 1989 The eleventh Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in Kuala Lumpur.
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21 October 1989 The assembled Commonwealth Heads of Government issue the Langkawi Declaration, committing Commonwealth members to environmental sustainability.
24 January 1990 The 1990 Commonwealth Games open in Auckland. 21 March 1990 Namibia joins the Commonwealth upon being granted
independence by South Africa. 1990 Commonwealth Finance Ministers Meeting, Trinidad
Launch of Commonwealth debt relief initiative 1 July 1990 Nigeria’s Chief Emeka Anyaoku succeeds Shridath Ramphal
as Commonwealth Secretary General. 13 October 1991 The twelfth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting
convenes in Harare. At the conclusion, the assembled Commonwealth Heads of Government issue the Harare Declaration, adding the core principles and values of the core principles and values of the Commonwealth, detailing membership criteria, and redefining and reinforcing its purpose. (Along with the 1971 Singapore Declaration, it is considered one of the most important documents of the Commonwealth’s constitution.)
21 October 1993 The thirteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in Limassol.
April 1994. Black majority rule in South Africa. South Africa rejoins the Commonwealth. Commonwealth Finance Ministers meeting, Malta Commonwealth debt relief initiative
18 August 1994 The 1994 Commonwealth Games open in Victoria, Canada. The event marked South Africa’s return to the Games after a 36 year absence.
1 July 1995 Chief Emeka Anyaoku begins his second term as Commonwealth Secretary General.
10 November 1995 The fourteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting convenes in Auckland.
12 November 1995 The assembled Commonwealth Heads of Government agree to the Millbrook Commonwealth Action Programme on the Harare Declaration, designed to implement the Harare Declaration’s affirmation of the Commonwealth’s principles and membership criteria. Creation of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG), set up to deal with persistent and serious violators of the Commonwealth’s shared principles. Nigeria suspended from the Commonwealth following the sentencing to death of writer and activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa and a group of fellow activists. (during 1990s CMAG meets twice a year, and deals with Nigeria, Sierra Leone, The Gambia, Pakistan, Fiji ,Solomon Islands, & Zimbabwe; Lesotho; Tanzania-Zanzibar; Swaziland; Guyana; Antigua/Barbuda.
13 November 1995 Cameroon joins the Commonwealth (having been granted independence by France in 1960, and joined by the former British colony of South Cameroons in 1961.) Mozambique joins the Commonwealth, the first country without having had constitutional ties to an existing member.
January 1996 CMAG failed attempts to visit Nigeria. March 1996 House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee Report on the
Future of the Commonwealth (Conclusions and
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Recommendations published in the Round Table, 339, July 1996) Announcement that next CHOGM venue will be Edinburgh. GB announcement of 600,000 pledge to Commonwealth of Learning
April 1996 Indian election. Prime Minister Narasimha Rao defeated. May 1996 BJP leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee sworn in as President, then
resigned 13 days later. Devi Gowda formed government April-May 1996 Talks between coalition of Sierra Leone People’s Party
(SLPP), PDP and DCP, and rebel Revolutionary United Front May 1996 Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia visit to Britain June 1996 Nigerian delegation, led by FM Tomi Ikimi, visit to London.
CMAG meeting in London (Gambia and Nigeria on formal agenda) Referendum in Gambia
July 1996 President Nelson Mandela visit to London. Launch of Commonwealth African Investment Fund
September 1996 CMAG meeting in New York Commonwealth Finance Ministers’ meeting, Bermuda
Proposals for HIPC IDA and other Bank/Fund issues Private capital flows Commonwealth Private Investment Initiative (CPII) Combatting Money Laundering
November 1996 CMAG visit to Nigeria February 1997 African Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting,
Botswana CMAG meeting in London (Nigeria, the Gambia, Sierra Leone)
March 1997 Commonwealth Day Debate, House of Commons May 1997 British General Election.
Labour Government under Prime Minister Tony Blair June 1997 Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule July 1997 CMAG meeting 31 August 1997 Death of Diana, Princess of Wales September 1997 Commonwealth Finance Ministers Meeting, Mauritius
(Globalization, HIPC, [the Mauritus Mandate], Promoting Private Capital Flows, Trade and Investment, CPII, Combatting Money Laundering. Gordon Brown (in one of first speeches as Chancellor) calls for wide spread relief of debt.
1 October 1997 Fiji rejoins the Commonwealth, following adoption of a new constitution more in line with Commonwealth principles.
22-23 October 1997 Commonwealth Business Forum, London(attended by businesspeople, government officials and several heads of government)
24 October 1997 The fifteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting convenes in Edinburgh.
26 October 1997 Retreat at St Andrews 27 October 1997 At the conclusion, the assembled Heads of Government issue
the Edinburgh Declaration, codifying the Commonwealth’s membership criteria.
10 April 1998 Good Friday Agreement (GFA) 11 September 1998 The 1998 Commonwealth Games open in Kuala Lumpur. The
first games to be held in Asia.
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29 May 1999 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group lifts Nigeria’s suspension from the Commonwealth.
18 October 1999 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group suspends Pakistan from the Commonwealth with immediate effect.
12 November 1999 The sixteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in Durban. Thabo Mbeki becomes the first Commonwealth Chairperson-in-office.
1999 Hong Kong reverts to PRC sovereignty. (continued participation in the Commonwealth Lawyers Association, the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, the Association of Commonwealth Universities, the Commonwealth Association of Legislative Counsels)
1 April 2000 New Zealand’s Don McKinnon succeeds Chief Emeka Anyaoku as Commonwealth Secretary General
6 June 2000 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group partially suspends Fiji from the Commonwealth with immediate effect.
28 September 2000 The Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting (due to convene in Brisbane on 6 October) is cancelled in the aftermath of the 11 September attacks in the US.
20 December 2000 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group lifts Fiji’s suspension from the Commonwealth, but keeps it on the agenda until the Supreme Court rules on the government’s constitutionality.
2 March 2001 The seventeenth Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting convenes in Coolum, Australia. John Howard becomes Commonwealth Chairperson-in-office.
October 2001 Visit by Commonwealth ministers to Zimbabwe. Announcement that Zimbabwe has done little to honour commitments to end the crisis over seizures of land.
30 January 2002 The Ministerial Action Group approves General Musharaff’s roadmap for the October general election
19 March 2002 After Commonwealth election observers report that Zimbabwe’s presidential election was rife with fraud and intimidation, the troika, led by John Howard, announces Zimbabwe’s immediate suspension from the Commonwealth.
25 July 2002 The 2002 Commonwealth Games open in Manchester. 5 December 2003 The eighteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting
convenes in Abuja, Nigeria. Olusegun Osabanjo becomes Commonwealth Chairperson-in-Office. Zimbabwe’s suspension extended indefinitely. Don McKinnon is re-elected as Commonwealth Secretary General in a competitive election by 40 votes to 11 votes, against Sri Lanka’s Lakshman Kadirgamar.
7 December 2003 Robert Mugabe personally announces Zimbabwe’s immediate withdrawal from the Commonwealth, following his failure to have suspension lifted.
8 December 2003 At the conclusion of the eighteenth CHOGM, the assembled Commonwealth Heads of Government issue the Aso Rock Declaration, reaffirming the Commonwealth’s commitment to the Harare Declaration.
22 May 2004 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group lifts Pakistan’s suspension from the Commonwealth with immediate effect.
7 April 2005 the International Organisations Act 2005 is passed in the UK, amending the Commonwealth Secretariat Act 1966.
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25 November 2005 The nineteenth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting convenes in Valletta, Malta. Lawrence Gonzi becomes Commonwealth Chairperson-in-Office.
15 March 2006 The 2006 Commonwealth Games open in Melbourne. 8 December 2006 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group suspends Fiji
from the Commonwealth with immediate effect. 24 October 2007 The committee on Commonwealth Membership makes
recommendations on changes to the membership criteria of the Commonwealth.
22 November 2007 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group suspends Pakistan from the Commonwealth with immediate effect, following President Musharraf’s declaration of a state of emergency and sacking of top judges.
23 November 2007 The twentieth Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting convenes in Kampala. Yoweri Museveni becomes Commonwealth Chairperson-in-office.
1 April 2008 Kamalesh Sharma succeeds Don McKinnon as Commonwealth Secretary General.
22 May 2008 The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group lifts Pakistan’s suspension from the Commonwealth with immediate effect.
1 September 2009 Fiji’s suspension is increased to full suspension, following a failure to commit to the restoration of electoral government by 2010.
27 November 2009 The twenty-first commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting convenes in Port of Spain. Patrick Manning becomes Commonwealth Chairperson-in-Office. Rwanda joins the Commonwealth after applying for membership in 2008. (in recognition of its ‘tremendous progress’ since the 1994 genocide.) Eminent Persons Group (EPG) membership:
Dr Emmanuel O Akewety (Ghana) Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi (Malaysia, Chairperson) Mrs Patricia Francis (Jamaica) Dr Asma Jahangir (Pakistan) Mr Samuel Kavuma (Uganda) The Hon Michael Kirby (Australia) Dr Graca Machel (Mozambique) Rt Hon Sir Malcolm Rifkind (UK) Sir Ron Sanders (Guyana) Senator Hugh Segal (Canada) Sir Ieremia Tabai (Kiribati)
26 May 2010 Kamla Persad-Bissessar becomes Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, and thus succeeds Patrick Manning as Commonwealth Chairperson-in-Office.
3 October 2010 The 2010 Commonwealth Games open in Delhi. 28 October 2011 The twenty-second Commonwealth Heads of Government
meeting convenes in Perth. Julia Gillard becomes Commonwealth Chairperson in Office.
November 2011 The British Parliament’s Foreign Affairs select committee recommends better representation for Crown Dependencies such as the Channel Islands in the Commonwealth.
January 2012 The Commonwealth calls for credible elections in Fiji, after General Voreqe Bainimarama announces plan to end martial rule and to hold elections in 2014. Fiji remains suspended from
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the Commonwealth and is the subject of international sanctions.
2012 Australian Prime Minister makes statement in Parliament: 2013 The controversial twenty-third Commonwealth Heads of
Government meeting convenes in Columbo, Sri Lanka 2015 Commonwealth Games open in Glasgow November 2015 The twenty-fourth Commonwealth heads meeting opens in
Valetta, Malta. Patricia Scotland is elected Secretary General, against Commonwealth Deputy Secretary General Msasekgoa Masire-Mwamba, and Sir Ronald Sanders
April 2018 Commonwealth Games open at the Gold Coast, Australia April 2018 Commonwealth summit, London
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Issues for Discussion
The following list is indicative of the broad areas we are hoping will be commented upon by participants during the witness seminar:
1. The role and input and engagement of the British Government under PrimeMinister Rt Hon John Major to the Commonwealth.
2. The decision for Britain to host the 1997 summit in Edinburgh.
3. The attitude of the British Labour party to the Commonwealth before coming tooffice.
4. The 1997 Election, and Labour in office:o The place of the Commonwealth in Labour’s ‘ethicial’ foreign policyo Labour and the Commonwealth:o Personalities and Policies (the attitude and approach of
Prime Minister Rt Hon Tony Blair, Foreign SecretaryRobin Cook)
o A Revitalized Commonwealth?o The Queen’s tour of Pakistan and India
5. The importance of Commonwealth developments:The work of CMAG (Sierra Leone, Nigeria, The Gambia) Soundings from potential new members
6. Preparations for the summit:Official motif: Trade, Investment and Development
7. The Commonwealth summit
• policy issues• trade and investment• commodity-dependent countries• impact of globalization on low-income countries• sustainable pathways out of debt
• Membership criteriaApplications from Yemen, Rwanda and Palestinian National Authority
• Proposed aid programmes• Trade and Investment Access Facility• Commonwealth Training Centre• Simplification of customs procedures• Commonwealth Export Training centres
• Launch of South Asia Regional Fund (part of Commonwealth PrivateInvestment Initiative, [CDC/Commonwealth Secretariat)
• CMAG reports (Nigeria, Sierra Leone)
• the distraction of other issues in British foreign policy and party politics: EMU
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8. The Retreat (St Andrews)
9. The Edinburgh Economic Declaration.
10. The Edinburgh summit and the Queen.
11. Role of Commonwealth NGOs in Edinburgh
11. The Commonwealth summit and the Press.
12. Aftermath
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Discussion
Dr Sue Onslow Ladies and gentlemen, honoured speakers and honoured guests, it gives me great
pleasure to welcome you to the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at Senate House.
I am Sue Onslow, acting Director of the Institute, and it is my pleasure to chair this
event on ‘Britain in the Commonwealth: the 1997 Edinburgh Commonwealth Heads
of Government Meeting (CHOGM).’
It gives me great pleasure to welcome those who were closely involved in the
planning – both political and logistical – within the British Government, within the
Commonwealth Secretariat and, critically, within the non-governmental organisation
(NGO) sector in the run-up to CHOGM. As we face the Commonwealth summit
which will be held in London next month, it is worth remembering that the Edinburgh
heads’ meeting was the last time Britain hosted such an event. I think that we will all
identify many echoes from the context of the Edinburgh meeting, which are still
relevant to this day – the background of Europe, the background of problems within
the Commonwealth, debates about its revitalisation, debates about membership, and
debates about the headship – which were all there in the 1997 summit.
This was, of course, the first summit which had a prearranged motif of economics,
which had been agreed before the incoming Labour government under Tony Blair,
elected in May 1997. We will be covering the transitional arrangements from the
John Major government into the new Blair administration, and then the summit itself.
It gives me great pleasure to welcome here around this table Sir John Holmes, who
then was PPS to the Prime Minister. He first joined Prime Minister John Major’s
office in Downing Secretary as his Private Secretary, Overseas Affairs, and
Diplomatic Adviser at the beginning of 1996. He continued in this role under Prime
Minister Tony Blair from 1997 to 1999, becoming his PPS, and was a key figure in
the negotiation of the Good Friday Agreement; consequently he had a particularly
close view of the important backdrop of British domestic political debates in the run
up to, and at the time of the Edinburgh summit.
I also welcome Mr Martin Hatfull, who was then Head of the Commonwealth
Coordination Department at the FCO. Mr Hatfull is a former British diplomat, and
recently stepped down as Director of International Public Affairs at Diageo. Formerly
on the UK-India Business Council, he is currently Vice Chair of the UK-ASEAN
18
Business Council. Mr Hatfull joined the FCO in 1980 and rose to become Minister at
the British Embassy in Tokyo between 2003-2008 and also served as Ambassador to
Indonesia.
In 1997 Mr Stuart Mole, on my left, was Director and Head of the Office of the
Commonwealth Secretary General, Chief Emeka Anyaoku. Stuart Mole had joined
the Secretariat in the early 1980s and, by this point, along with my other colleague,
Mr Amitav Banerji, was – I hesitate to use the word – a veteran of CHOGMs, which
was very important in terms of their detailed knowledge and experience in the
framing, assistance and planning of these summits. After serving at the Secretariat,
Mr Mole later became Director of the RCS between 2000 and 2008.
Mr Amitav Banerji, in 1997, was Deputy Conference Secretary at the Commonwealth
Secretariat. He later became Chief of Staff to Secretary General Don McKinnon. He
also served as Director of the Political Affairs Department and is now Project Director
at the Global Leadership Foundation.
Ms Prunella Scarlett, then Director of Commonwealth Affairs at the RCS, will be
speaking about the very important role of NGOs at the Edinburgh summit, giving the
background context, the organisation and the multidimensional aspects of the
Commonwealth and the innovation of including civil society.
I am delighted also to welcome to this table, not as a ‘late entry’ but as a very
welcome addition to the discussion, Ms Anji Hunter, then Personal Assistant to Prime
Minister Tony Blair.
Thank you very much indeed, honoured guests.
If I may provide a brief framework to our discussion: witness seminars are organised
as an interactive discussion. These are not intended as the occasion for delivering
long speeches, but rather for each participant to talk to the others, to interrogate
recollections and to stimulate our memories. I am sorry that Dr Moses Anafu,
formerly in the Political Affairs Department and Deputy Conference Secretary in
1997, cannot be with us today. I am also very sorry that Sir Richard Dales, then
Director, Africa and the Commonwealth, FCO, is similarly unable to attend. However,
he has kindly sent a memorandum of his recollections, which are as follows:
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Sir Richard Dales
I took up my post (at the time designated Assistant Under Secretary of State for
Africa and the Commonwealth) in late 1995, and thus inherited the decision to hold
the 1997 CHOGM in Edinburgh. My recollections of both the preparations for the
Conference and the event itself are very sketchy. This is partly a consequence of the
lapse of time and my age, but also of the fact that the bulk of the work in the FCO
was done by the excellent teams of the Commonwealth Coordination Department,
who coordinated the contribution from the departments dealing with economic policy,
trade and development etc and of the Conference Section of Protocol Department
who took care of the logistical arrangements. In addition, events in Africa were a
constant preoccupation for me. That’s my excuse anyway.
Policy and Agenda Preparations
John Major’s Conservative Government was in office. Malcolm Rifkind was Secretary
of State and Lynda Chalker, Minister of State covering Africa and the
Commonwealth. The Conservative Party had a reputation for regarding the
Commonwealth as a bit of a nuisance, a forum in which the former colonies could
pillory the ex-colonial power and beg for more aid. This attitude was not reflected in
the government. The Commonwealth was still named separately in the title of the
Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, a separate Department in the FCO covered
Commonwealth affairs (like the departments covering the EU and the UN etc).
Ministers probably saw the main benefit of the Commonwealth as lying in the way its
multiplicity of NGO and groupings (such as judges) provided a means of upholding
its values. But it also provided a forum bringing together a third of the countries in the
world and thus a means for Britain to project its policies. At the same time, ministers
were well aware of the importance of avoiding appearing to treat the Commonwealth
as a useful poodle internationally.
The CHOGM was therefore a major opportunity for the UK. It was going to take place
soon before the UK assumed the Presidency of the EU (first half of 1998) and the
Chairmanship of the G10. A complication in preparing the agenda and intended
outcome of the CHOGM was that a British General Election was expected before the
end of 1997. Opinion polls made it seem likely that Labour would come into office.
We therefore had to ensure that British objectives were supported by both major
parties. Ensuring that all the preparations for the CHOGM would survive a change of
government was a major preoccupation for me. It was decided early on that the
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principal British objectives should be to get the Commonwealth to sign up to policies
to remove barriers to trade and investment, a major foreign policy objective at the
time but also one which was likely to be shared by Labour and LibDems. Discreet
contacts tended to confirm this. Another strategic objective was action on
environmental protection.
These policy issues were not the sole preserve of the Commonwealth Coordination
Department, or even the FCO, so the coordination across Whitehall and with the
Commonwealth Secretariat was a major undertaking. However, I recall the
Secretariat as being supportive, while emphasising the importance of making sure
that the benefits of liberalisation would extend to the poorer and smaller countries.
The all-important preparatory meeting of Senior Officials was constructive as we
were able to be sympathetic to suggestions that the trade and investment policy we
hoped would emerge from the CHOGM should include measures to protect the
interests of small states. (The more difficult issue was how to achieve this, but I do
not remember how it was resolved.) Britain also shared the serious concerns that
several Commonwealth countries, especially in the Pacific, were threatened by rising
sea levels and needed special attention in international negotiations on
environmental protection. It was a useful supporting argument in international
negotiations.
Internal Politics
Labour distinguished itself from the Conservatives in expressing a certain
enthusiasm for the Commonwealth as an institution with the implication that a Labour
Government in office would pay more attention to it. Discreet enquiries suggested
that Labour would support the British proposals for the CHOGM. (In my view the
differences between the two parties were purely presentational and not substantial-
as indeed with Robin Cook’s so-called “ethical foreign policy”. There were no
significant changes in the execution of policy with the change of government, as
regards either the Commonwealth or ethics.)
I was naturally concerned to ensure that the new Labour Government was in full
agreement with both the policy issues and the arrangements for the CHOGM. I was
advised by one of my political contacts that to ensure the Prime Minister’s support I
had to get myself accepted by two lady “gate-keepers” at No 10, both of whom I
arranged to consult. When I was summoned to brief Tony Blair (the first time was
fairly early on) I found him well up on what we were proposing and receptive to
21
suggestions. I remember nothing of substance, but I do remember coming away from
the meeting feeling with great relief that the PM was on board. He was also very
much aware of the special opportunity to promote British interests offered by the co-
incidence of the CHOGM, EU Presidency and G10 chairmanship within a six month
period.
I should mention that Robin Cook took remarkably little interest in the preparations
for the CHOGM (or indeed in the Commonwealth). Baroness Symons, a junior FCO
Minister, had responsibility for the Commonwealth. She took a particular interest in
the logistical arrangements.
CMAG
We regarded CMAG as a useful committee. I do not remember the issue of Asian
membership as a major preoccupation for the Committee (or Britain) as it hit straight
at the rivalry between India and Pakistan and no-one wanted both!
Lynda Chalker had been a very active participant in CMAG meetings and although
there were mutterings from some other members that the Secretary of State should
attend in person, I do not re-member whether either Malcolm Rifkind or Robin Cook
ever attended.
Commonwealth Membership
A subsidiary British objective for the CHOGM was to get the Commonwealth to take
a stance on Nigeria (then under Sonny Abacha), the Gambia, Sierra Leone and to
adopt the recommendations of CMAG on criteria for Commonwealth Membership.
Mandela had railroaded the previous CHOGM into accepting Mozambique as a
member, which had no British connections whatsoever. Rwanda and the PLO were
now seeking to join. The PLO was not eligible as it was not a state, but Rwanda was
in the hands of an English- speaking regime which had grown up in exile in Uganda
and come to power with a huge tide of sympathy after a bloody ethnic conflict only
three years be-fore the CHOGM. The UK was determined to stop the expansion to
countries which had no experience of “Commonwealth values”. It was hard enough
making sure that all existing members put into practice the concepts of the Harare
Declaration. Even the proposed criteria would in theory al-low Iraq, Libya and
Palestine to apply, but the last thing anybody wanted was the exposure of the
Commonwealth to the intractable problems of the Middle East. My recollection is that
22
the UK and its allies fended off the new applications, but I recall the look of extreme
annoyance on Mandela’s face when his attempt to admit the PLO (I am not sure
about Rwanda) was thwarted. I think it may have been the first time that he had been
overruled. He was evidently not used to failing to get his way.
Logistics
The first CHOGM I attended was in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1975. (I was an Assistant
Private Secretary to the Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, James Callaghan.) It
lasted over a week. The CHOGM of 1977 (which I also attended part of) was only
slightly shorter. Both included an away-weekend, when Heads of Government and
Foreign Ministers gathered separately in informal surroundings without officials. By
the 1990’s no British Prime Minister could afford to devote so long to one meeting
(and nor could many other Heads of Government) given the multiplicity of
international meetings of that period. Moreover, the whole weekend Retreat away
from the conference centre had become more difficult, both because of the need for
suitably prestigious hotel accommodation for over fifty Heads of Government and
because the increase in the number of Commonwealth members had made the
informality of the weekend very difficult to achieve. The 1997 meeting was therefore
not only cut down to 4 days, Friday to Monday, but the Retreat was turned into a day
trip. I remember that this caused resentment among some countries but that Britain
would make no concession. I cannot remember whether the 4 day meeting was
decided upon by Mr Major or by Mr Blair, but I believe that the decision not to stay a
night away on Retreat was taken by Mr Blair, because of the difficulties of finding
suitable hotel accommodation for such large numbers outside Edinburgh. At one time
we were considering having the Retreat in Edinburgh, so that no-one would have to
move. In the end we decided upon St Andrews to which a special train took all
participants. The journey would be easier to organise than having masses of cars
trying to get out of Edinburgh and the travelling time could form part of the Retreat. It
did not work. There were quite a few critical mutterings on that train!
The logistical arrangements for the CHOGM were in the hands of the FCO’s
Conference Section. I went early on the Edinburgh to look at the facilities and to
establish links with the Scottish civil servants in Edinburgh who would have to help
with much of the preparatory work. Police and security, car hire firms, hotels, press
arrangements and ultimately provision of separate facilities for the Business and
NGO forums which (I think) ran in parallel. Soon after Labour came into Government,
23
I went again, with Baroness Symons, to check that all the arrangements made by
that time were right. Conference Section were very effective in coordinating all the
different aspects of logistics. They recruited a businessman to help with contract
negotiations covering everything from hotels to freebies (the memento packs, of
varying value, given to all delegates. I still have my CHOGM 1997 ballpoint!!) I
chaired coordination meetings attended by different departments to ensure that all
the boxes were ticked on both the substance of the meeting and the arrangements. I
am fairly sure that we came in on budget.
The logistical arrangements were extremely difficult because none of the facilities
were really big enough for such a large meeting of VIPs. Even the (new) Conference
Centre was a tight fit. But there was no question of moving the venue from
Edinburgh. I remember negative comments from some Commonwealth officials who I
think thought that we had done the CHOGM on the cheap. There was of course
never any question of building a special Commonwealth village on a par with
Mobutu’s OAU village in Kinshasa, where each OAU head of Government had their
own villa to stay in at an OAU Summit!
Dr Sue Onslow
I would now like to invite Sir John Holmes to begin. Sir John, what are your
recollections around the decision to hold the summit in the UK, the attitude of Prime
Minister John Major, and your memory of events as the summit itself approached?
Sir John Holmes
Thank you very much, Sue, and thank you very much for the invitation. As I said to
you right at the beginning, this is coloured by the fact that my memory of the detail of
this event is limited, although refreshed by the documents you have sent round; so a
certain amount of secondary reconstruction may have gone on from my memory, but
let us hope not too much.
I thought that what I would do is not really talk, certainly in this introductory bit, about
much detail but just talk about the general context in which the event was happening
from, first of all, John Major’s point of view and then Tony Blair’s point of view.
Forgive me if I am slightly brutal at times about it.
24
The first point to make is to put a Commonwealth summit into the general context of
a prime minister’s diary. Any prime minister these days – and certainly in those days
as well – is incredibly busy, trying to do several jobs at once – being prime minister,
keeping their party going, keeping the House of Commons going and so on – with a
large number of international obligations which, to some extent, in a prime minister’s
view, get in the way of the real business of governing their own country.
There are a large number of summits on the agenda in any one year, and I would
say that CHOGM is the most pleasant but possibly the least substantive of those;
therefore, that is the way in which a prime minister would approach it and, not of their
own volition, necessarily, take a huge interest in it until it happens and they have to
be there and deal with it. Of course, it has a lot of ancillary advantages: it is a great
place to meet a lot of leaders in one place and in a way in which you cannot do at
other summits such as European or NATO summits. This is a much broader
gathering, a bit like the United Nations, in a way, so that is an attraction of any
CHOGM.
The job of someone like me was always to try to make sure that there was enough
focus from the prime minister – whether it was John Major or Tony Blair – on what
was going to be an important public event and to make sure that they had enough
input into it and that they were happy with the way the preparations were going. That
is the general approach to it.
As far as John Major was concerned, by the time I got there, the decision to hold a
meeting in the UK had been taken significantly before that, but the serious
preparations were just beginning. Just to put it into the context of John Major’s
thinking about it: although he would not have said it in quite this way, he would have
had a pretty good idea that he was not going to be at the heads’ meeting. Although
he was hoping to win the election, the chances of that, even at 18 months out, did
not look particularly bright, so that, no doubt, would have coloured his attitude. So
one just needs to have that in mind too.
At the same time, of course, he wanted it to be done properly – to be a well-run
summit with some good themes and some good substance in it. That is the point
which I recall most strongly: this desire from John Major downwards that this should
be a substantive summit, with some meat to the agenda which was not just the usual
declarations of values. Commonwealth summits in the past had been completely
25
dominated by subjects like South Africa, which was no longer on the agenda in the
same way, although there were other issues of a similar nature, perhaps. There
was, then, a desire to say, ‘Can we use the Commonwealth for something else and
focus it on something else?’ - hence the idea of a summit very much focused on
economic issues. Trade and investment was an initial wish and it was necessary to
add development to that later, because that was a preoccupation of most of the
Commonwealth members, which was not a problem.
That was the wish: to focus it on that. I am not going to talk about the logistics of it
because that goes for itself, but there was a number of meetings that I was involved
in with the Commonwealth people in the FCO about how we should organise this,
about how we should make sure that this focus trade and investment and
development was there, what we could get out of it, and what the traps, problems
and opportunities were. That was what was happening in John Major’s time; of
course, he disappeared five months before it happened. As the time approached, it
became more and more obvious that he was not going to win the election, and it
became more and more problematic to run the government as a whole. It was a very
difficult end-of-government period after 18 years of Conservatives in power and the
lack of a majority etc, so his own personal attention to the summit, I think, was pretty
limited. That, then, was the Major approach to it in general, without trying to get into
too much detail.
When Tony Blair arrived on 1 May, again you need to remember the context, which
is sometimes a bit hard to believe now. This was a time when Tony Blair could walk
on water, as far as the electorate was concerned; and he was a prime minister with
huge self-confidence in his own ability to reach agreement on almost anything.
There was, as your papers bring out, a Labour commitment to the Commonwealth. If
I am honest, however, I do not think I could say that Tony Blair’s commitment to the
Commonwealth was particularly obvious – not that he was against it at all but it was
not something that was foremost in his thoughts. If the Commonwealth bits were
there – and Anji can correct me if I am wrong – it was probably more because of
Robin Cook than it was because of Tony Blair. If you look at his record, he did his
stuff at the Commonwealth when he had to but, I was looking at his autobiography a
couple of days ago and, if you look in the back index for ‘Commonwealth’, you will
not find it, and that is perhaps not an accident.
26
At the same time, he wanted to make a success of this meeting – it was an important
that the UK was hosting, and there was the commitment to the Commonwealth – and
to be a more positive supporter of the Commonwealth than the Conservatives had
been; so there was an obvious incentive from that point of view to make a success of
it. He wanted to make a success of everything. Since everything was new, there
was an opportunity to do different and new things and to get some positive press
interest in it. Getting the British press interested in the Commonwealth is always an
uphill struggle but he was certainly very keen to do that, if he possibly could, and I
think that coloured his attitude to the approach to the summit. I think he was happy
that there was this economic focus that fitted with the agenda and with the idea of
putting some substance into it, if at all possible, and not just having the usual political
arguments. He was particularly interested in the global-trade side, which was a bit
controversial, as we will, no doubt, come to later, but also in Nigeria and the issues
that that was causing at the time.
It was a job to get him to focus on Commonwealth summit before it happened, and
that is particularly also because there were some very big issues preoccupying him
at the time in the run-up to that, including learning how to be a prime minister, apart
from anything else. Northern Ireland was a constant preoccupation throughout this
time and went on for many years after that, and was much in mind. The particular
preoccupation in the run-up to the summit and during the summit itself was the
argument about the European currency: whether we should join and what we should
say about that. It is not a secret that there was a lot of disagreement between him
and Gordon Brown about this. There was a huge amount of negotiation that had
been going on for weeks – indeed, months – about what sort of statement should be
made about that, culminating in the statement which Gordon Brown made on the
Monday immediately after the summit.
His mind was very much on that all that time, because this was a huge existential
issue for the UK. It is something to which he was committed but knew that there
were huge problems with. As I say, there was a disagreement with Gordon Brown
about it, which was also concerning. Again, you just need to have that context firmly
in mind when you are thinking about the Edinburgh meeting.
Perhaps the last bit of context is the relationship with Robin Cook, which was not
always the easiest relationship. Robin Cook had announced a new foreign policy
approach – I am not sure how new it was, to be honest, but it was called a new
27
foreign policy approach, and it was labelled by Robin Cook an ‘ethical’ foreign policy.
Tony Blair did not want foreign policy to be unethical but his approach was more
pragmatic, so he was not particularly bought-in to the new, ethical nature of foreign
policy. He wanted to make sure that we were defending British interests in perhaps
a more pragmatic way than that label would have implied, so, again, that was
somewhere in the background of the relationships going on at the time of the summit.
That, then, is by way of introduction, if I may.
Dr Sue Onslow
Thank you very much indeed, Sir John. Mr Hatfull, how does this correspond to your
own recollections in terms of the focus and attention of the Prime Minister and
engagement with your own Department?
Martin Hatfull
It corresponds very well. My perspective on it was different from John’s because of
the different role that I was doing. Perhaps just to set a bit of personal context: I was
appointed to the role as Head of Commonwealth Coordination Department in late
1996, so about a year out from the summit itself. I was appointed on promotion, and
the relevance of that is that, normally, to be honest, the job of Head of
Commonwealth Coordination Department would not have been one which would
have been terribly attractive to a reasonably ambitious, youngish diplomat in the
FCO, because normally it was seen as very much of a backwater. However, it was
because it was CHOGM that it was set up as something which was an opportunity to
be involved in something which was of real significance and importance to the
Government, who wanted, as John was saying, to have a substantive summit.
There was also already at that stage a recognition of the need to try to reinvigorate
not necessarily the Commonwealth but the UK’s relationship with the
Commonwealth. That reflected partly a difficult relationship between the UK and the
Commonwealth – or a relationship which was difficult at times – which I think was a
reflection of the concerns which many members of the Commonwealth had about
Prime Minister Thatcher’s views on apartheid South Africa, and that that coloured a
lot of Commonwealth member states’ attitudes to the UK. The FCO had difficulty
knowing how to cope with that, to some extent.
John touched on the difficulties of the Major administration at the time, and certainly,
working in the FCO at that time, one was very aware of that. I came to my role from
a job in one of the EU departments, and we had had, during the course of 1996, the
28
bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-related beef ban, the policy of non-
cooperation with the EU, and John Major being in hock to a few extreme right-wing
Conservatives like Teddy Taylor and others. The whole atmosphere was very
difficult, so there was no sense of a dynamic foreign policy being executed at that
time.
In addition, in March 1996, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons
published a very important report on the future of the Commonwealth, which was
very critical of the Government’s approach to the Commonwealth, essentially arguing
that it was neglecting an important asset. Already, by the time that I came into my
job, there was a determination on the part of the FCO to try to respond to that by
demonstrating not only a commitment to make a successful CHOGM but to try to use
the Commonwealth more effectively as part of the UK’s foreign policy.
To some extent, the motivation for that was more to do with trying to deflect further
criticism from Parliament, rather than any substantive foreign-policy objective.
Certainly, in the tail end of the Major administration, I do not really recollect any close
attention on CHOGM preparations from Malcolm Rifkind or other FCO ministers, with
the exception of Lynda Chalker, who was interested. The then Permanent Secretary,
John Coles, was also quite focused on CHOGM preparations.
John touched on the fact that the major decisions in terms of location, format and
theme etc had already been taken, and I think, insofar as the business forum was
concerned and also the separate dedicated centre for the NGOs at CHOGM, my
recollection is that those decisions had been taken in principle but were still to be
sorted in terms of the detail of the practicalities. During the last few months of the
Major administration, my main focus was, first of all, on learning about the
Commonwealth, because I knew absolutely nothing about the Commonwealth when I
took the job. That is also indicative because I had done a range of different jobs in
the FCO by that stage, but I think there were very few people working in the FCO
who understood the Commonwealth or had more than a passing knowledge of it. It
is an extremely complex organism rather than an organisation, and so trying to get
my head around that was the main preoccupation.
In terms of trying to get staff and resources, the Commonwealth Coordination
Department, when I joined it, was about four people. Trying to build that up into a
team which could be the core of a team which would manage the summit, with other
departments like the Conference Department at the FCO and other bits of the
29
Government machinery that we were also able to draw on, was a big preoccupation,
just in terms of getting the staff in place. Clearly, making a start on the practical
arrangements, we knew that there was an election coming and that, therefore, there
was no point in trying to start to fine-tune things such as hotels and transport
arrangements. At that stage, it was not possible anyway that far out from the
summit.
There was also quite a lot of non-CHOGM-related stuff that still had to be dealt with.
There was an issue over the future of the Commonwealth Institute, for example.
There were all the routine issues to do with the Commonwealth Finance Committee
and the relationships with the Commonwealth Secretariat and so on.
When the Labour Government came in, my recollection is that it was, within the FCO,
widely welcomed because it offered an opportunity for a fresh start. There were
difficulties in the FCO, as elsewhere, initially over Labour ministers’ suspicions about
bureaucrats who they expected to be tainted by years of Thatcherism, but one got
over that. From the Commonwealth’s point of view, my sense was that there was a
great sense of goodwill towards to the Labour Government, precisely because it was
the flipside of the concerns about Thatcher’s views on apartheid and the fact that the
Labour Party had been such a strong supporter of the anti-apartheid movement.
That alone stood it in quite a lot of credit.
John touched on the fact that the new Government was happy with the economic
focus and the broad arrangements for CHOGM, and also repeated that desire to be
clearer about what the Commonwealth was for and what its economic role was.
There was also a relationship there to the ethical foreign policy; for example, trying to
get a stronger role for the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) so that it
was effective in implementing the principles in the Harare Declaration in relation to
Nigeria, Sierra Leone and elsewhere was a concern. Subsequently, that was a
matter of some discussion with Commonwealth members.
As we approached the summit itself, I was juggling administration and logistics –
things like liaising with the two different police forces in Scotland who were involved,
as well as with colleagues in the Commonwealth Secretariat and other bits of
Government – as well as, from a policy point of view, trying to keep an oversight of
what was happening with the developing economic declaration and the developing
communiqué etc. There is an extraordinary Christmas tree, especially in the report
30
of the Committee of the Whole, which gets endorsed by ministers with an incredible
number of different Commonwealth organisations and bodies of one sort or another
that need to be recognised in some form in the CHOGM communiqué.
That was the antithesis of the sense that we got from Anji and colleagues in Number
10, which was a desire to make CHOGM something which was identifiably an
achievement for the Prime Minister in particular. That was increasingly evident as
we got closer to the date, and I remember a number of meetings with Anji, Magi
Cleaver and, on occasion, Alastair Campbell and others on a range of things like the
logo, the branding, the video, the new orchestration of the national anthem and all of
that sort of stuff around the production, if you like, of the event, which Number 10,
understandably, placed a lot of importance on. It was not only that, however; it was
also, as I said earlier, a renewed focus on trying to establish an identity for the
Commonwealth: ‘Why are we doing all this?’ It is because it is important for the
world economy and for development, and also for education. One of the things that
is sometimes overlooked is the stuff on the Commonwealth of Learning, and that was
an important focus as we prepared.
Those, then, are my impressionistic recollections, at this distance, of the preparations
for the summit.
Dr Sue Onslow
Thank you very much, Mr Hatfull. Ms Hunter, if I could ask you at this particular point
in the flow of the conversation, for your particular recollections of how quickly – if at
all – Prime Minister Tony Blair came to understand the Commonwealth as a complex
organism rather than as an organisation? And if you could comment on his
relationship with Robin Cook? It is often said that personalities in politics are very
important. Robin Cook had recently been involved in a very controversial tour of the
Queen to Pakistan and to India, which had created a lot of attention in the press – it
had been a point of real friction with the Indian Government around the issue of
Kashmir. Could you add any light on those two different aspects?
Anji Hunter
If I could just recollect something that both of these gentlemen have touched on: the
election that year, was held on 1 May 1997. So we went in [to No 10] on 2 May and
there had been, as John said, 18 years of Conservative rule. There was this sense,
you will recall, in 1997 of youth, vigour and excitement about our administration
31
coming in. You say that you had been planning for a change of government. I can
absolutely promise you that we never expected to win in the way that we did and with
that huge majority. We did not. We entered on 2 May, and I remember walking into
Downing Street. We were somewhat in a state of shock at entering No. 10 in any
event. At the risk of sounding sycophantic in this company, the one thing you know
when you get into Downing Street is you just say, ‘Thank you, God, for our civil
servants’. You do have a Rolls Royce machine and operation in Downing Street –
these guys and the Cabinet Secretary – and you know you are in the hands of
people who really know how to do things properly, which is what we wanted to do.
We were not like this current Labour Party – we were New Labour and we were pro-
business, pro-monarchy and pro-the establishment.
I remember, in my first or second week, being called in to the Cabinet Room. The
Prime Minister was sitting there, and I think Sir Robin Butler, the Cabinet Secretary,
was sitting opposite him. John was also in there, as was the Foreign Secretary,
Robin Cook. If it is okay with you, I will refer to Tony Blair as ‘Tony’. Tony said, ‘I
have just been informed that we have four massive events coming up over the next
year. We have CHOGM’. I did not even know what ‘CHOGM’ meant. He said, ‘We
have to host the Commonwealth in October. In April, we have the Asia-Europe
Meeting (ASEM). In May, we have the G8 in Birmingham. Then we have the
European summit in Cardiff in June’. He said to me, ‘You are going to the point
person on all of this with the FCO’. You can imagine that I was in a state of shock at
that.
Robin and the Prime Minister had an odd relationship. We had always thought that
Robin was more from the left wing of the party and we always thought he was what
we called ‘tricksy’: you were never quite sure with him. However, they had mutual
respect for each other. There was no question about that. I have to say Tony was
not mad keen on the ethical foreign policy – not, as John says, that he was for an
unethical foreign policy, but just to raise it up in this sort of ‘Of course we are going to
have an ethical foreign policy, and of course our people in the FCO are going to
behave in an ethical way’. He was slightly suspicious of the Foreign Secretary on
that but they worked together – there was no question about that – and they worked
together perfectly well, often with the help of the officials that would smooth the
waters between them.
We were sitting in this room and the Foreign Secretary said, ‘If you are having your
person involved in this, I want my person involved in it too’. We were just waiting to
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see whom he suggested, and he suggested Baroness Symons, who was a very good
person because she was emollient and very respectful of her colleagues and her
officials in the Department. I knew she would work really well with us: she was ‘one
of us’, as they say.
We were set to work on these four events, the first of which was CHOGM. It is true
that the Prime Minister was not anti the Commonwealth. He did not know much
about it but he was keen to find out about it. When he found out that this was going
to be the biggest one that had ever been, with 48 countries represented, 20 of which
all had new leaders, he felt he was amongst a new group of people too. It was not
just us being new; they were all new.
I do not know if you recall but there was this thing called ‘Cool Britannia’, which we
had not invented. I absolutely promise it was not a phrase of ours. Cool Britannia
was on the front of Time magazine. Ben & Jerry’s had an ice-cream called Cool
Britannia. It was out there and some of our own younger officials were quite excited
by it in Downing Street: the prospect of Oasis and these sorts of people coming into
Downing Street. There was that thing about ‘Let us not just make this a meeting of
heads of state; let us make it a cultural event as well and to be as sensible culturally
as possible, and not to have the Spice Girls or anything’, although I believe we had
them at the G8, rather regretfully. We had Evelyn Glennie, the Scottish
percussionist, and John Thaw doing a reading. There was also poetry and ballet. A
couple of countries put on some splendid song and dance as well, so there was that
sense of trying to make it into something like a fringe, with fringe events to the main
event.
It was also the first time that the Queen was presiding over the Commonwealth.
Before, she had attended Commonwealths, but it was at receptions the night before.
She opened it, however, and presided over it. We wanted that in the news. We
were hell-bent on getting good coverage in those days. I remember her looking very
bemused during the national anthem because, as John said, it was a new version of
it, which nobody recognised. Nobody stood up – that was what was embarrassing.
Liz Symons got everybody to stand up in the royal box. She got the
Foreign Secretary to stand up.
It was exciting in that sense. There was a new, ‘Let us make it youthful and
vigorous’, not just about people getting in a room and just, ‘Chat, chat, chat’. We
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arranged a photo-call with Nelson Mandela walking around the golf course – things
like that that we knew the media would be interested in – as well as going to St
Andrews on the Orient Express. We organised great pictures of all of that, so we did
get into the newspapers but not much because, as has been referred to, our single
horror that weekend was the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). The Prime
Minister and the Chancellor, Gordon Brown, were absolutely at loggerheads the
entire weekend on the phone. Tony Blair was trying to do bilaterals and trying to
have good meetings. I remember Mugabe giving us a great lecture on land
ownership and distribution.
Tony did really definitely try to have these bilateral meetings but he was slightly
obsessed with what was going on down in Whitehall, and various briefings and the
Chancellor’s people briefing against us. Trying to keep the whole CHOGM thing on
the road was one of my responsibilities, and I think most people who attended it
thought it had been successful.
Dr Sue Onslow
Thank you very much indeed. Stuart, if I may, what are your recollections?
Stuart Mole
Thank you. Can I first say that, at the last witness seminar I attended, I arrived late
and, to much derision, said that I had been delayed by cows on the line at Taunton.
When I fought my way through the snow this morning, I thought, ‘I am not going to be
late today’.
It is very interesting to hear three colleagues talking about the summit, and I just
want to chip in, from our perspective, with, first of all, how we saw John Major and
Tony Blair. The first thing to say about John Major is that he had some feeling for the
Commonwealth originally because of the time that he spent in Nigeria, which ended
prematurely with a very nasty road accident; but he also had that short stint as
Foreign Secretary, where he had had a rather unfortunate experience, although he
did not seem to think so particularly – at least not in his memoirs – at the Kuala
Lumpur CHOGM over South Africa, where Mrs Thatcher was seen to disown him.
He was also Chancellor of the Exchequer and he was among a long and honourable
line of British chancellors who have advanced the cause of debt relief within the
Commonwealth. John Major was instrumental in encouraging the Commonwealth to
get behind the Toronto terms at that stage in terms of debt relief. Gordon Brown took
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on that same tradition. By the time John Majot came to the Commonwealth as Prime
Minister, he was not unknown and he knew the Commonwealth in a way that
perhaps Tony Blair did not.
The other thing I want to say is that the 1991 Harare CHOGM was a very important
one for the Commonwealth in terms of trying to exorcise the ghosts of Mrs Thatcher
and of the whole anti-apartheid struggle in terms of the antagonisms with the British
Government. I think there was a recognition on the Commonwealth side that it
meant a far greater focus on governance, human rights and democracy. It was in the
UK’s interests to see some coming together from what some have described as a
binary Commonwealth that opened up in the 1980s between the UK and the rest, as
it were.
I mention Harare because, of course, although every CHOGM is different, because,
while you have the Secretariat that tries to stick to its script in terms of how it plays its
part at this summits, every host is different. Therefore, there is a different chemistry
and a different character to each of the summits and, of course, Edinburgh was no
exception. However, although the host plays a very important role, it is not the only
player in this. The job of the Secretary General is to conduct extensive consultations
with other heads of government – I think there were 46 heads of government in
Edinburgh, which was a record, and 52 countries represented overall. Of course, all
sorts of interests will come.
I absolutely agree with Martin in terms of the Foreign Affairs Committee report of
1996. David Howell, a huge advocate for the Commonwealth then, as now, was the
Chairman of that committee. That was a very important report in changing
perceptions of the Commonwealth’s role in that respect. However, there were other
perspectives on the economic side which were coming in and which were
instrumental; for instance, quite a lot of countries had said that ‘Harare in 1991
concentrated more on the political dimension and we believe there ought to be a
Harare economic declaration, maybe even with the same instrumentality that
developed with CMAG’. There was, then, a feeling that there needed to be more on
the economic side and, in particular, development. Of course, it was in Edinburgh
too where the small-states agenda got second wind. Since a majority of
Commonwealth countries – then and now – are small states, that too was important.
When the economic declaration came out, it was an amalgam of all these different
views.
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Anji reminded us about the whole cultural side and the beginnings of what we now
recognise as different forums and so on. That was very important. The unique thing,
which, no doubt, Pru will talk about, is the UK Year of the Commonwealth and the
build-up, and the way we worked together on that. That was extremely important. I
hope we are going to talk about the monarchy and about some of the resonances
now of what happened then, not just in terms of the Queen being present at the
opening and making a speech, which was new ground, but also in other respects,
where the question of the succession was an issue.
On the national anthem, people said that they thought it had been played on the
central-heating system – that is what it more or less sounded like, I think. There
were other aspects of Cool Britannia – whether it was wise to highlight Trainspotting
as one of the UK’s major cultural outpourings, I do not know.
Stuart Mole
I am sure we will – and I hope we do – come on to discussing the retreat. The idea
of an away-day as opposed to an overnight stop and the retreat, ever since Pierre
Trudeau initiated the idea, was seen as a very important creative component of the
Commonwealth meeting. The away-day did present challenges and came in for
some criticism for being truncated in that way.
Dr Sue Onslow
Stuart, thank you very much indeed.